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Lucky Jim

  • Book
  • 1954
  • #Fiction #Literature #Humor
Kingsley Amis
@KingsleyAmis
(Author)
www.goodreads.com
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3.76/5 23.2k ratings
1 Recommender
1 Mention
1 Ask
Regarded by many as the finest, and funniest, comic novel of the twentieth century, Lucky Jim remains as trenchant, withering, and eloquently misanthropic as when it first scandaliz... Show More

Regarded by many as the finest, and funniest, comic novel of the twentieth century, Lucky Jim remains as trenchant, withering, and eloquently misanthropic as when it first scandalized readers back in 1954. This is the story of Jim Dixon, a hapless lecturer in medieval history at a provincial university who knows better than most that “there was no end to the ways in which nice things are nicer than nasty ones.” Kingsley Amis’s scabrous debut leads the reader through a gallery of emphatically English bores, cranks, frauds, and neurotics with whom Dixon must contend in one way or another in order to hold on to his cushy academic perch and win the girl of his fancy.

More than just a merciless satire of cloistered college life and stuffy postwar manners, Lucky Jim is an attack on the forces of boredom, whatever form they may take, and a work of art that at once distills and extends an entire tradition of English comic writing, from Fielding and Dickens through Wodehouse and Waugh. As Christopher Hitchens has written, “If you can picture Bertie or Jeeves being capable of actual malice, and simultaneously imagine Evelyn Waugh forgetting about original sin, you have the combination of innocence and experience that makes this short romp so imperishable.”

(From Goodreads)

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Number of Pages: 251

ISBN: 0140186301

ISBN-13: 9780140186307

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Richard Barnett @RichardBLaw · Jan 14, 2023
  • Answered to Have you ever taken against a book, given up on it, but then, at another time in your life, given it another shot and loved it?
  • From Twitter
Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis tried to read it when I was 18, put it down after 30 pages - but got it out the Library 20 years later and loved it. Eerily just as my lecturer at uni predicted… I wasn’t experienced enough to get it.
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  • Sathnam Sanghera
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    Have you ever taken against a book, given up on it, but then, at another time in your life, given it another shot and loved it?
    71 answers
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